“My company is going public next month,” he continued. “My team says it’s better if I’m single. A cleaner image than being married to someone like you.”
Emily met his gaze.
“So now I’m bad for your stock value?”
“It’s business. Don’t take it personally.”
He tapped the papers.
“The prenup says you get nothing. But I’m generous.”
He flicked the black card toward her.
“There’s money on it. Enough to survive. And you can keep the old car.”
The lawyer beside him hesitated.
“The car technically—”
“Let her keep it,” Ethan cut in. “I’m being kind.”
He smiled again.
“Go ahead. Sign it. I have lunch plans.”
Emily looked at the documents… then at the card.
Two years ago, he wasn’t like this.
Back then, he was struggling to keep his startup alive. She had supported him, organized everything, believed in him when no one else did. She had even used her own savings to help his company survive.
Now, none of that mattered.
“Do you really think I want your money?” she asked quietly.
“Everyone wants money. Especially people who have nothing.”
He scoffed.
“Sign.”
Emily reached into her bag.
Ethan stiffened.
But she simply pulled out a cheap pen.
“I don’t want your money,” she said softly. “And I don’t want the car.”

She signed carefully:
Emily Reed Carter.
The sound of the pen against paper felt louder than it should have.
She placed it down and pushed the documents forward.
“It’s done. You’re free.”